Sans Other Obhy 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, signage, stencil-like, industrial, retro, playful, assertive, high impact, distinctiveness, stencil effect, display focus, rugged texture, angular, blocky, cut-in, compressed counters.
A heavy, block-built sans with sharply chiseled corners and frequent internal cut-ins that create a stencil-like rhythm. Strokes are generally uniform and slabby, with subtly irregular, hand-cut edges that keep the texture lively rather than purely geometric. Counters tend to be small and often appear as squared apertures or notches, producing dense letterforms with strong silhouette recognition. Spacing and widths vary noticeably across characters, giving the line a slightly syncopated, poster-style cadence while remaining upright and stable.
Best suited to display contexts where strong silhouettes and a rugged texture are assets, such as posters, headlines, brand marks, packaging callouts, and short signage messages. It performs especially well in larger sizes and high-contrast applications where the small counters and cut-in details can remain legible.
The overall tone is bold and punchy, mixing industrial signage energy with a quirky, cut-paper personality. The angular notches and compact counters add a rugged, DIY feel that reads as both retro and slightly mischievous, making the font feel energetic and attention-seeking rather than neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a constructed, stencil-adjacent look—prioritizing bold shapes, compact counters, and distinctive notching for memorable branding and display typography. The variable widths and slightly irregular edges suggest a deliberate move away from strict geometry toward a hand-cut, industrial poster aesthetic.
The uppercase has a particularly monolithic presence, while the lowercase keeps the same carved construction and maintains clear differentiation between characters through distinctive notches and openings. Numerals share the same blocky build and compact interior spaces, reinforcing a consistent, high-contrast-on-page texture at display sizes.